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SCARAB (Lat. scarabaeus, connected wi...

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 301 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SCARAB (
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Lat. scarabaeus, connected with Gr. K6.pa(3or)
  , literally a beetle, and derivatively an
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Egyptian symbol in the form of a beetle . The Egyptian hieroglyph g pictures a dung beetle (scarabaeus sacer) , which
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lays its egg in a ball of dung, and may be seen on sandy slopes in hot
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sunshine compacting the pellet by pushing it backward uphill with its
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hind legs and allowing it to roll down again, eventually reaching a place of deposit . Whatever the Egyptians may have understood by its actions, they compared its pellet to the globe of the sun . The beetle is
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common on both shores of the Mediterranean; the Egyptian name was kheperer, kheperi, and the sign spelt the verb khopi(r) meaning " become " and perhaps " create," also the substantive " phenomenon " or " marvel." The
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insect was sacred to the sun-
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god in his form kiteperi at
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Heliopolis, and has been found mummified . A
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colossal scarabaeus of granite in the
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British Museum probably came from the temple of Heliopolis . The scarabaeus was much used in Egyptian religions, appearing sometimes with outstretched wings or with a ram's head and horns as the vivifying soul . It is often seen in this guise on coffins of the New
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Kingdom and later, when it also became the custom to place in the bandages of the mummy a large stone scarab engraved with a chapter of the
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Book of the Dead . This chapter, the 64th, identified the
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object with the heart of the deceased and conjured it not to betray him in the
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judgment before
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Osiris . A winged scarab might also be laid on the breast; and later a number of scarabs were placed about the
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body . These are often of hard stone and of
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fine workmanship . Another and even more important class of Egyptian antiquities is in the form of scarabs, pierced longitudinally for a swivel or for threading, and having the bases flat and engraved with designs . These were intended principally for
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seals, but might also be used as beads or ornaments .

They are thus found, engraved or

plain, strung on necklaces, and
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amethyst scarabs with plain bases are common articles of
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Middle Kingdom jewelry . But the employment of scarabs as seals is proved by the impressions found on sealed documents of the Middle and New Kingdom; on several occasions the impressed clay seals alone have been found hardened and preserved by the fire which had destroyed the archives themselves . The seal type of scarabaei is extremely abundant, and the designs engraved beneath them show endless variety . Some have inscriptions carefully executed, but frequently corrupted by illiterate copying until they became meaningless . The inscriptions are sometimes " mottoes " having reference to places, deities, &c., or containing words of good omen or friendly wishes, e.g . "
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Memphis is mighty for ever," " Ammon protecteth," " Mat give thee long
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life," "
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Bubastis grant a good New
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Year," " May thy name endure and a son be born thee." Such are of the New Kingdom or later . Names and titles of officials appear, most commonly in the Middle Kingdom . Historically the most valuable class is of those which bear royal arms, ranging from
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Cheops of the IVth dynasty to the end of the XXVIth dynasty . Certain
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great kings are commemorated on scarabs of periods long subsequent to them . Thus Cheops (Khufu) may appear on an example of the latest Pharaonic age, and Tethmosis III. is found at all times after the XVIIIth dynasty . But as a
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rule the royal names are of contemporary workmanship, and the differences of style and
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pattern make it possible to
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group unknown kings with those who are known historically; the names of the
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Hyksos kings have been principally recovered from collections of scarab-seals . Scarab-shaped seals are traceable as far back as about the VIth dynasty .

They became abundant under the XIIth and continued until almost the end of the native rule . As seals they took the place of the earlier cylinders . Considering the life-

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history of the scarabaeus and its meaning as a hieroglyph, it may well be that the scarab impressing the clay had a symbolic significance; however that may be, the oval form was well adapted for seal-stones and for the bezels of
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finger rings . In this situation the scarabs were often mounted with a rim of gold or
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silver round the edge . Rings of stone, glass or metal, with engraved bezels of the same material, and eventually Greek gem rings, gradually displaced them . A series of exceptionally large scarabs was engraved in the reign of Amenophis I I I., c . 1450 B.C., all being inscribed with his name together with that of Queen Taia and her parentage . At
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present five varieties are known . The simplest commemorates his queen and the north and south limits of his
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empire; another dated in the first year, a great battue of wild cattle; the third, the arrival of the princess Gilukhipa of Mitanni in the tenth year; the
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fourth (many specimens), the number of lions slain by the king down to his tenth year; the last, the cutting of the lake of Zarukhe in the
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eleventh year . Egyptian scarabs were carried by trade to most of the islands and shores of the eastern Mediterranean and to Mesopotamia . The Greeks, especially in their Egyptian colony of
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Naucratis (q.v.), imitated them in soft paste . The finest
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Etruscan gems of the 6th and 5th centuries B.c. are in the form of scarabs, perhaps suggested by the Egyptian .

The forgers of antiquities have carried on a brisk trade in scarabs for more than a

century . See P . E . Newberry, Scarabs (
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London, 1906); also
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art . GEM, especially for later scarabaeoid gems . (F . LL .

End of Article: SCARAB (Lat. scarabaeus, connected with Gr. K6.pa(3or)
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